OXNARD, Calif. - Oxnard, Calif., and Pittsburgh, Penn., have joined Seattle, Wash., Albany, N.Y., Boone, N.C., and other cities across the country urging the Obama administration and the Environmental Protection Agency to use the Clean Air Act to reduce carbon and other pollutants to address the increasingly urgent global climate crisis. By passing resolutions, these cities join the Center for Biological Diversity’s national Clean Air Cities campaign.

“There is no doubt that the Clean Air Act has saved thousands of lives in our country. Polluted air has terrible effects on the health of our children and all of us. This has enormous costs for our society,” said Oxnard City Council member Carmen Ramirez, who sponsored the resolution that was passed Tuesday night. “We thank all of those who have enacted and supported this law. I am proud of my city for passing this resolution."

“I’m so pleased to see Oxnard join this urgent effort to support the Clean Air Act and action on climate change now,” said Lupe Anguiano, one of the Center’s Clean Air Advocates who spearheaded passage of the Oxnard resolution. The Oxnard resolution received unanimous and bipartisan support from Mayor Dr. Thomas Holden, Mayor Pro-Tem Dr. Irene Pinkard and council members Brian MacDonald and Timothy Flynn and the City’s legislative analyst Martin Erickson, who helped draft the resolution.

“By passing these resolutions, cities like Pittsburgh and Oxnard are standing up to big polluters’ attempts to gut the Clean Air Act,” said Rose Braz, the Center’s climate campaign director. “We need to urgently reduce global warming pollution and the Clean Air Act can do that.”

Similar resolutions have also been approved in Seattle, Wash., Albany, N.Y., Tucson, Ariz., Boone, N.C., and Arcata, Richmond, Berkeley and Santa Monica, Calif. Several other cities around the country will be considering similar resolutions over the next few months.

Oxnard is a coastal city that will be affected by rising sea levels caused by climate change. Ventura County is also expected to suffer water shortages due to decreased snowpack in the Sierra Nevadas along with higher temperatures, longer heat waves and a longer wildfire season brought by climate change.

At the Center for Biological Diversity, we believe that the welfare of human beings is deeply linked to nature - to the existence in our world of a vast diversity of wild animals and plants. Because diversity has intrinsic value, and because its loss impoverishes society, we work to secure a future for all species, great and small, hovering on the brink of extinction. We do so through science, law, and creative media, with a focus on protecting the lands, waters, and climate that species need to survive.

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